Hi All,
Well, my younger DD is in the final week of her junior year in HS. We are now beginning to put together a list of potential colleges. I've been down this road before with my older DD. The difference is my older one was high academics, but this one....yeah, school is where she goes to do theatre.
I've come to realize that applying to "theatre" schools is very, very different from "regular" colleges. First, she is NON performance: all technical work for her. She is leaning toward stage management, but she's also interested in all the other technical areas, too. I know the competition for tech isn't what it is for performance, so she has that going for her.
She is not a strong academic student. She has an active 504 plan for her ADD, math deficits, and some visual processing issues. She is a horrendous standardized test taker. She is not looking at any top tier academic programs at all.
I've spent a large amount of time on College Confidential in the theatre forum. However, most of those parents and kids are performance majors. We know that she'll need to apply to more schools than most regular kids because she must be accpeted into both the college and the theatre program.
Finally, she wants a BFA program. We would love to find a true conservatory or a conservatory type program for her. We are doing research into each school's major requirements. It's amazing how each school differs, even with a BFA, with what "core" they require. Obviously, we're looking for as little "academic core" as possible because, quite frankly, she's terrible at that.
So, I've got a list of schools, but for those of you who know about these things, I wanted to see if anyone has any other school suggestions. While I like college confidential, it does tend to be rather elitist. After all, everyone can't go to Juillard.
If you know anything about the schools I'm listing (either theatre or non theatre related), I'd love to know. Also, if you know of any school we might want to consider, please let me know.
Finally, please do not try to convince me that a BFA in theatre is a "waste" of money, time, degree, etc. This is non-negotiable. When you ask your child what they would do if they couldn't do theatre and the answer is "die," then you know this is their destined path. I don't want to hear to make sure she has something "to fall back on" either. She will get her degree and find a way to make a living, so that is the end of that argument.
On to the schools:
Columbus State University (this is our "best" theatre school in GA, supposedly)
Gainesville Theatre Alliance (with Brenau and Gainesville State)
Valdosta State (All 3 of these are in our home state, but they have more core than we would like.)
University of North Carolina School of the Arts (ok...looooooong shot, but you gotta have one of those)
Western Carolina University
University of Central Florida
Point Park University
Shenandoah University
Coastal Carolina University
Virginia Commonwealth University
Webster University
Savannah College of Art and Design (although I can't exactly figure out what they offer in tech theatre)
Well, if you've read this far, thanks! I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Melanie
Well, my younger DD is in the final week of her junior year in HS. We are now beginning to put together a list of potential colleges. I've been down this road before with my older DD. The difference is my older one was high academics, but this one....yeah, school is where she goes to do theatre.
I've come to realize that applying to "theatre" schools is very, very different from "regular" colleges. First, she is NON performance: all technical work for her. She is leaning toward stage management, but she's also interested in all the other technical areas, too. I know the competition for tech isn't what it is for performance, so she has that going for her.
She is not a strong academic student. She has an active 504 plan for her ADD, math deficits, and some visual processing issues. She is a horrendous standardized test taker. She is not looking at any top tier academic programs at all.
I've spent a large amount of time on College Confidential in the theatre forum. However, most of those parents and kids are performance majors. We know that she'll need to apply to more schools than most regular kids because she must be accpeted into both the college and the theatre program.
Finally, she wants a BFA program. We would love to find a true conservatory or a conservatory type program for her. We are doing research into each school's major requirements. It's amazing how each school differs, even with a BFA, with what "core" they require. Obviously, we're looking for as little "academic core" as possible because, quite frankly, she's terrible at that.
So, I've got a list of schools, but for those of you who know about these things, I wanted to see if anyone has any other school suggestions. While I like college confidential, it does tend to be rather elitist. After all, everyone can't go to Juillard.

Finally, please do not try to convince me that a BFA in theatre is a "waste" of money, time, degree, etc. This is non-negotiable. When you ask your child what they would do if they couldn't do theatre and the answer is "die," then you know this is their destined path. I don't want to hear to make sure she has something "to fall back on" either. She will get her degree and find a way to make a living, so that is the end of that argument.
On to the schools:
Columbus State University (this is our "best" theatre school in GA, supposedly)
Gainesville Theatre Alliance (with Brenau and Gainesville State)
Valdosta State (All 3 of these are in our home state, but they have more core than we would like.)
University of North Carolina School of the Arts (ok...looooooong shot, but you gotta have one of those)
Western Carolina University
University of Central Florida
Point Park University
Shenandoah University
Coastal Carolina University
Virginia Commonwealth University
Webster University
Savannah College of Art and Design (although I can't exactly figure out what they offer in tech theatre)
Well, if you've read this far, thanks! I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Melanie